Best & Worst Days of Week to Visit Every Park at Disney World in 2026

Looking for the best and worst days of the week to visit each park at Walt Disney World? This strategy guide covers Magic Kingdom, EPCOT, Hollywood Studios, and Animal Kingdom, offering info about when the wait times are lowest and highest, plus commentary about weekdays vs. weekends, special events, and more.
Like many of our planning resources, this is a ‘teach a person to fish’ rather than ‘giving a person a fish’ post. This is to say that we spend a lot of time explaining the why of crowd patterns so you can understand what’s happening, how dynamics might differ during your dates, or if it’ll actually matter to you.
This can be overwhelming for some people, so we’ll start with a few of the biggest lessons up front. First, every single park at Walt Disney World is busiest on Mondays. If at all possible, you shouldn’t do any parks on Monday. If you must, do Animal Kingdom on Monday since it’s the lowest stakes park. Saturday is a close second as a day to avoid, especially since it’s popular with locals, exacerbating congestion. This is true year-round.
The best day of the week at Walt Disney World is Wednesday. This is followed closely by Thursday. Taking that a step further, Wednesdays through Fridays are the best stretch of the week. As a whole, Friday is slightly busier, especially at night–the day starts out slower.
Conversely, the second half of Sundays is better than the first half. This isn’t quite the across-the-board advice of avoiding Mondays, but if you have a 3-day park day window to target, Wednesdays through Fridays is the winning choice. All of this is also true year-round.
Finally, this matters much more from August through December than the rest of the year. Choosing the best day of the week is a good idea if possible from January through July, but incredibly important for the final few months of the year. These are the biggest takeaways and ‘universal truths’ from this post.
Everything that follows is much more granular, circumstantial, and (sometimes) confusing. After all of the explanations, there are bullet-pointed green light, yellow light, and red light style ‘rules’ for when to visit, which should help make more sense of things.

When it comes to choosing the best and worst times to visit Walt Disney World, there’s a lot to consider. If you’re singularly focused on avoiding long lines, we recommend consulting our 2026 Walt Disney World Crowd Calendar to choose travel dates. That gets updated fairly regularly, with each individual month receiving a refresh right before it begins for optimal accuracy.
If you’re more concerned with the quality of the overall experience, we also have something more holistic and, frankly, practical: our list of the 10 Best and 10 Worst Weeks to Visit Walt Disney World in 2026 & 2027. Once you narrow down the week you want to visit Walt Disney World, it’s time to start thinking about which days of the week to do each park.
That’s where this post come into play, starting with the latest changes for 2026…
Ticket Deals

Walt Disney World has now released the first two ticket deals for 2026, and we’d be remiss if we didn’t cover how these impact day-of-week crowd levels.
For our purposes, the only deals that truly matter are those aimed at Florida residents. The general public uses discounts more uniformly; tourists are using these deals whenever they’re on vacation. By contrast, locals utilizing discounts are more disruptive to regular crowd dynamics.
The second Florida resident ticket deal of 2026 runs through October 3, 2026. As we’ve seen with every “use it or lose it” ticket deal, there is an observable spike in crowd levels over the final full week of the deal. This impacts our aforementioned best & worst weeks list for 2026. More central to this guide is the day of week and park-level impact.

Over the last few weekends of the ticket deals, crowds spike significantly. This should be unsurprising; most locals have 9 to 5 jobs during the workweek, and can only visit on Saturdays or Sundays (and sometimes Fridays). With each of the last major ticket deals over the last year, we’ve observed major spikes in weekend crowds over the course of the deal’s final month–especially at EPCOT.
For the last deal, average crowd levels went from 2/10 to 3/10 on weekdays to 6/10 to 8/10 on weekends. This gap was far greater than normal, and started growing closer to the ticket deal expiring. It was most pronounced on Saturdays, but even Fridays and Sundays saw a bump.
In other words, you should avoid Saturdays in all parks starting around the Labor Day long weekend. The weekend after is Rosh Hashanah, a holiday that can sometimes spike crowds. Consider also avoiding Fridays and Sundays, especially from September 18, 2026 through the expiration of the deal on October 3, 2026.

If there’s another big deal offered after that, the same pattern will repeat itself. Another deal is unlikely, however, as the holiday season typically does not offer worthwhile Florida resident deals. The next deal after that is likely to start in early January 2027 and run through mid-May 2027.
Also note that the importance of this recommendation matters more closer to the expiration date of the tickets, so it’s less important August 15, 2026 than it is September 26, 2026). Weather is another big difference-maker for locals; they’re likely to visit or avoid the parks based on whether the weather is good or bad.
Beyond that, here’s our explanation of the best & worst days of the week at Walt Disney World for each park…
Hollywood Studios

Although weekends have gotten busier across the board at Walt Disney World, Fridays through Sundays remain good days to do Disney’s Hollywood Studios. Or at least, better than some other parks. This is especially true if you arrive early or stay late.
Sunday nights are the absolute best time to visit Disney’s Hollywood Studios. If you’re arriving late (after 4 pm), you can accomplish a surprising amount in that half-day at DHS. Frankly, it’s difficult to explain the ‘why’ of that at this point. One possibility is that locals still do Disney’s Hollywood Studios on Sunday, but do so during the middle of the day and depart early.
This causes a big spike in midday wait times, resulting in both those guests and others bouncing early…and shorter wait times in the afternoon and evening. It’s also possible that locals are less inclined to do rides, especially ones with higher wait times.
DHS is a bad option on Mondays and Tuesdays. This is because it’s usually the #2 priority park (after Magic Kingdom) for most guests, so guests end up doing Disney’s Hollywood Studios earlier in their trip…which usually means Mondays or Tuesdays.
Objectively, Wednesday or Thursday are the absolute best options–the lowest wait times of the week at Disney’s Hollywood Studios. If neither of those days work, Friday through Sundays are almost as good–potentially better if you arrive early or stay late. Basically, crowd levels start out strong to begin the week and drop significantly on Wednesday.
EPCOT

EPCOT is the worst pick on weekends because it’s the biggest “local’s park” at Walt Disney World, and EPCOT is more popular with Floridians than tourists. The gap has closed a little thanks to Remy’s Ratatouille Adventure, Guardians of the Galaxy: Cosmic Rewind, and Test Track 3.0, but it’s still true.
Wait times don’t tell the full story–or even the main one–when it comes to EPCOT on weekends. Since locals are less likely to do rides, they add to ‘feels like’ crowds and congestion without making attraction wait times noticeably worse. This is still a negative, as lines for food booths are longer and World Showcase is generally less pleasant on the weekends.
You’re also more likely to encounter groups Drinking Around the World on Saturday and Sunday. For those of you who want to relive your glory days by attending an open air frat party, this might sound appealing. We’re not teetotalers or anything, but this sometimes can be a tad too much for a family-friendly theme park. Even if it doesn’t cross the line, World Showcase is significantly more crowded and congested on Friday nights, Saturdays, and Sundays.
This is is a qualitative assessment, and not a quantitative one. Wait times are not significantly worse at EPCOT on weekends. Since most of the aforementioned audience is visiting to drink, they have a minor impact on rides. But even objectively, Saturday is the third busiest day of the week for wait times.
You might be able to “beat” the weekend crowds at EPCOT simply by arriving early, doing World Showcase first, and then doubling-back into Future World in the early afternoon. That’s a savvy strategy, and one we recommend in our EPCOT 1-Day Itinerary. If you must do a weekend, choose Sunday (it’s objectively slower), arrive early and stay until park closing. Midday is the worst as locals arrive later and leave earlier.
Our actual advice is visiting EPCOT on a weekday. Wednesdays through Friday are all equally good. As EPCOT has added more top-tier attractions, it’s now also a high-priority park, and has the worst wait times Mondays and Tuesdays. Avoid those days.
Animal Kingdom

Animal Kingdom is the park that requires the least strategy and is the easiest place to beat the crowds in all of Walt Disney World. It doesn’t require buying Lightning Lanes, and is pretty easy to knock out everything–and then some–if you stay for a full day.
Objectively, the best days to visit Animal Kingdom are weekdays. Average daily wait times are lower Tuesday through Friday than they are Saturday or Sunday. Once again, Wednesday is the best day of the week–but you can’t do every park on Wednesday, so Animal Kingdom is a good option on Monday or Tuesday, when every other park is significantly busier.
Weekend wait times are only “worse” at Animal Kingdom due to the middle of the day. If you’re staying on-site and taking advantage of Early Entry (or even going before 10 am), it’s easy to beat the crowds. Moreover, there’s a pretty steep fall off in wait times during the last couple hours Animal Kingdom is open. This one does vary by season (during the holidays, it’s less likely to be true) but is accurate to some degree throughout the entire year.
Statistically, Animal Kingdom is a “bad” park to do on Saturday or Sunday. However, we don’t hesitate to visit it on either of those days because it is so easy to outsmart the crowds–just arrive early and/or stay late, and do shows or animal exhibits midday when crowds peak.
Our best advice is to choose your days for Magic Kingdom, Disney’s Hollywood Studios, and EPCOT first. Whatever day is left over can be assigned to Animal Kingdom. Don’t worry too much about this park. Even on crowded days, the strategy for Animal Kingdom is relatively simple, as covered in our 1-Day Animal Kingdom Itinerary.
Magic Kingdom

The worst day of the week at Magic Kingdom is Monday, and by a wide margin. Avoid Magic Kingdom on Mondays if at all possible. Tuesdays should also be avoided, but they’re not nearly as bad as Mondays.
Locals tend to visit on weekends, with Saturday being much more likely than Fridays or Sundays. Then there are Southerners who take long weekend trips, impacting all three days (but again, mostly Saturday). Still, these demos are all smaller than tourists, so none of them are truly terrible.
Finally, tourists most frequently start their trips on the weekend, and Monday is the most common first day in the parks for them. In disproportionate numbers, out-of-state vacation-goers do the most popular or their favorite park first, and that’s usually Magic Kingdom. They are less likely to visit Magic Kingdom in the second half of the week.
This leaves Thursday and Friday as the least busy days of the week at Magic Kingdom during normal times of the year. Sunday has also emerged as a surprisingly uncrowded day at Magic Kingdom. We’re hesitant to recommend visiting on Sunday because historical wait time data suggests this will change, but it has certainly been a good option lately.
Magic Kingdom can be more challenging when it’s busy, but it’s still possible to have a satisfying and productive day in the park. We’d recommend buying Lightning Lane Multi-Pass in Magic Kingdom, or at least using Early Entry. Follow our 1-Day Magic Kingdom Itinerary if you want to beat the crowds without either.
Party Season

Party season in Magic Kingdom encompasses early August through late December–a pretty big chunk of the calendar–when the Mickey’s Not So Scary Halloween Party (MNSSHP) and Mickey’s Very Merry Christmas Party (MVMCP) special events are held.
On days when the party is held, Magic Kingdom opens at 8 am or 9 am and closes to regular ticket holders at 6 pm. On non-party days, Magic Kingdom opens at 9 am and closes at 10 pm or 11 pm. Meaning MK is open 5 hours later to regular guests when MNSSHP and MVMCP are not held.
Most visitors see this and make the intuitive choice of visiting Magic Kingdom when they can spend extra hours in the park, experience evening, see Starlight night parade and Happily Ever After fireworks. It’s the “obvious” decision, as more time in the park is the strong guest preference.
Everyone making the same intuitive decision throws a monkey wrench into attendance and crowd dynamics during the party season. The consequence of that guest behavior should likewise be obvious: Magic Kingdom is significantly less busy during the day time hours on dates when parties are held in the evening, and much more busy on non-party days.

Magic Kingdom regularly has 7/10 or above crowd levels on non-party days, with Mondays and Saturdays being the worst.
By contrast, Magic Kingdom typically has 1/10 to 3/10 crowd levels on party days. That amounts to an average wait time differential of about 20 to 30 minutes per ride, which adds up over the course of the day to the point that you can accomplish more in the party-shortened days when Magic Kingdom closes at 6 pm.
The big downside to attending Magic Kingdom on a party day is having to leave by 6 pm. This means missing the fireworks, Starlight, and usually evening in the park. This is why we highly recommend Park Hopper tickets during Party Season, otherwise you’re faced with a difficult dilemma.

If you have Park Hoppers, visit during the day on 6 pm closing dates, and then hopping back for evening on 11 pm closing nights. Just brace yourself for significantly higher crowds than what you experienced on the party day, as many people will have the same idea!
Specifically, we recommend Park Hopping to another park before 4 pm. Guests of the events can start entering Magic Kingdom at 4 pm, and this ‘mix-in’ time with regular day guests is when the park goes from blissfully uncrowded to busier. (We usually aim to leave by 3 pm.)
There’s another upside to visiting Magic Kingdom during the day when a party is held at night: earlier opening times on many dates. This is a huge advantage–there’s a big difference in crowds for Early Entry on a day when Magic Kingdom opens to the public at 8 am vs. 9 am.

There’s also a flip side to all of this, which is that the other 3 parks are slightly less crowded on non-party days and more crowded on party days. This should make sense, given that Magic Kingdom crowds don’t exist in a vacuum. If less or more people are in one park, the opposite is true in the others.
As a result, all three other parks become marginally better options on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Saturdays during Party Season. We still don’t actively recommend doing Disney’s Hollywood Studios on a Monday–since that’s its busiest day of the week, but it’s not as bad on a Monday during Party Season as it is the rest of the year.
The converse is also true: EPCOT, Hollywood Studios, and Animal Kingdom are worse options on days when the parties are held in Magic Kingdom. It’s fairly slight, though. With 3 other parks to absorb the displaced guests, the impact is lower on each of them than on Magic Kingdom itself.

Complicating matters even more is that Disney’s Hollywood Studios is part of the Party Season fray at Christmas-time due to Disney Jollywood Nights. Because DHS hours aren’t reduced as much due to Jollywood Nights, the impact is lesser. As a result, we advise avoiding Disney’s Hollywood Studios on Jollywood Nights dates.
Taking that a step further, we’d recommend Animal Kingdom on Monday or Friday and EPCOT on Wednesday or Thursday during Party Season. That’s the easiest advice for navigating the complex crowd dynamics of Party Season. This supersedes all of the park-by-park recommendations below.
If you don’t mind more congestion or a more ‘lively’ atmosphere, EPCOT on Sunday is also an option. Sunday also remains a good pick for Disney’s Hollywood Studios, and Wednesday is great (except on DJN dates in December). If you have Park Hopper tickets, start at Animal Kingdom one morning and afternoon and bounce to Magic Kingdom for evening, in order to see the nighttime entertainment. Again, just be warned that crowds will be heavier, especially for Disney Starlight: Dream the Night Away and Happily Ever After.
Crowd patterns during Party Season are confusing, but also consistent–this same dynamic has played out with MNSSHP and MVMCP for years, and it makes a huge difference at Magic Kingdom. While it doesn’t encompass the entire calendar, it does apply to 5 months of the year–if you’re visiting during this stretch, we’d again highly recommend buying Park Hopper tickets and following this advice!
Best & Worst Days at WDW Recap

We’ve covered a lot of ground and it can be overwhelming, so let’s try to break down the best and worst days to visit each park at Walt Disney World in a more concise manner:
Visit on These Days:
- Wednesday and Thursday do Disney’s Hollywood Studios
- Sunday is also good at Disney’s Hollywood Studios if staying late
- Thursday or Friday do Magic Kingdom
- Wednesday through Friday do EPCOT
- Any weekday do Animal Kingdom–if you must do a park on Monday, make it DAK
- Party Days do Magic Kingdom if able to Park Hop elsewhere
Okay to Good Days:
- Fridays and Saturdays are fine at Disney’s Hollywood Studios
- Sunday is decent at Magic Kingdom, with nights being best
- Weekends are fine at EPCOT if arriving and leaving early
- Saturday and Sunday do Animal Kingdom if arriving early or staying late
Avoid These Days:
- Saturday, Monday and Tuesday don’t do Magic Kingdom
- Monday and Tuesday don’t do Disney’s Hollywood Studios
- Saturdays and Sundays don’t do EPCOT if staying all-day
- Saturdays and Sundays don’t do Animal Kingdom if arriving late and leaving early
- Saturdays everywhere in final 4 weeks of Florida resident ticket deals
- Fridays and Sundays in final few weeks of Florida resident ticket deals
With it laid out like this, you should see that some days are consistently the best and worst for multiple parks. This means that during the course of an average vacation, you might have no choice but to do certain parks on days that are not objectively as good. Don’t worry about that, as explained in the final section…
How Much Does Day of the Week Matter?

Average wait times can vary by 3 to 10 minutes on the best versus worst days of the week at each park. That may not seem like much, but a 10 minute difference is actually huge. Over the course of the day, that can means spending an hour (or more) less time waiting in line if you choose correctly.
However, it’s not usually a 10 minute difference–that’s an extreme example. You also probably wouldn’t choose the worst days if picking at random, nor would you accidentally go at only the time of day when crowds are heaviest and the gap is highest. So in practice, you can probably expect to save only a few minutes per ride by making good choices with the day of the week you visit each park. That’s not a ton of time, but it does add up over the course of a trip.
During Party Season or towards the end of Florida resident ticket deals, choosing the best days and avoiding the worst matters a lot more than all other times of the year. Especially if you’re visiting during the final three months of the year, picking the right day can be make-or-break in your perception of crowds.
Choosing a good week to visit Walt Disney World is more important than how you allocate your days within that window. Even more important is arriving early and/or staying late, which is the simplest way to beat crowds at Walt Disney World. Late morning to mid-afternoon is the busiest time of day at every single park, and when wait times are the worst.
Just as crucial is having savvy strategy. Picking a great day or week to visit can make touring the parks significantly easier, but so too can having a good itinerary that zigs when others zag. Then there’s the option of buying your way out of crowds with Lightning Lanes, which is another good fail safe option. Speaking of which, we have a comprehensive Guide to Lightning Lanes at Walt Disney World for those who want to thoroughly master the latest generation of paid FastPass.

Choosing the best days of the week–and avoiding the worst ones–at each Walt Disney World theme park comes after all of those things. To be sure, it’s a good practice and worth keeping in mind that Magic Kingdom is best on Thursday or Friday, or that EPCOT should be avoided on weekends.
It’s also useful for those boxed into less than ideal travel dates due to school or work schedules. Same goes for anyone who realistically won’t have the option to arrive early or stay late. Ditto anyone who doesn’t want to pay extra for Lightning Lanes. For anyone this describes, carefully choosing days of the week for each park can relieve some pressure and result in shorter wait times.
Moreover, day of the weeke recommendations are pretty easy to disrupt. All it really takes is inclimate weather (relatively commonplace in Florida) or inordinate attraction downtime. Either of those things can be enough to turn a “bad” day into a “good” one in terms of wait times, or vice-versa.

Ultimately, simply by virtue of researching and reading a post about the best and worst days of the week to visit every park at Walt Disney World, you’re better equipped to avoid crowds than 95% of guests–but because you’re almost certainly not reading just this strategy. While the advice here is theoretically useful, it’s pretty far from make or break.
You’re much better off using the other resources on this blog to choose good weeks to visit. If that’s not an option (or even if it is), remember to arrive early or stay late. Failing that, use our itineraries to prioritize attractions in the best order. Don’t want to do that for some odd reason, spend the money on Lightning Lane Multi-Pass and buy your way out of lines. If you’d rather not spend money and go with the flow during a midday-only visit…I guess this is the best advice for you!
Planning a Walt Disney World trip? Learn about hotels on our Walt Disney World Hotels Reviews page. For where to eat, read our Walt Disney World Restaurant Reviews. To save money on tickets or determine which type to buy, read our Tips for Saving Money on Walt Disney World Tickets post. Our What to Pack for Disney Trips post takes a unique look at clever items to take. For what to do and when to do it, our Walt Disney World Ride Guides will help. For comprehensive advice, the best place to start is our Walt Disney World Trip Planning Guide for everything you need to know!
Your Thoughts
Which days are your favorites for each of the parks? Think it’s good advice to avoid EPCOT on weekends, even if it’s not supported by wait times? What about weekends at Magic Kingdom and Disney’s Hollywood Studios? Any other best or worst days at each of the Walt Disney World theme parks? Do you agree or disagree with our picks? Any questions we can help you answer? Hearing your feedback–even when you disagree with us–is both interesting to us and helpful to other readers, so please share your thoughts below in the comments!

Hi there!
Thanks for the advice. Confused about party days for Magic Kingdom – what if we plan to attend the party?
THanks,
brianna
Hello. Im trying to nail down which park which day for our upcoming trip the first week of June. Does your advice here override the benefit of extended evening hours from staying at a deluxe resort? I was going to do Epcot on Monday and MK on Wednesday, but will the crowds during the day make it better to just pick another day that we can’t stay later? It will be the first week of June. Thanks .
I have the same question. I have been leaning towards those parks on those days anyway because I believe the benefit of the extended hours probably outweighs the risk of crowds during the day. Park hopping and going to a different park during the day and then taking advantage of the extended hours in the evening would likely be a better choice, but we never park hop.
Would love to get Tom’s thoughts on EEH vs crowds.
We are trying to decide on Magic Kingdom on Sunday in May or a Monday that has a ticketed event that night. Thoughts? TIA
I personally would not go to the magic kingdom on a weekend. We’ve gone on both Saturday and Sunday. Saturday was like being in hell with the way some visitors acted. It wasn’t fun. Sunday was extremely busy. I would do monday first.
I’m planning to go to Magic Kingdom on a Wednesday in mid May. However, I am planning to start the day with the Keys to the Kingdom tour and end the day taking advantage of the extra hours because I’ll be staying deluxe. I have been debating whether Lightning Lanes are worth getting. What are your thoughts?
This is such a great post! I’m wondering if the advice around party season translates to spring with the extended evening hours paired with Disney after hours events (especially during Spring Break)? Thanks!
I agree, this is a super helpful post, but no mention of Extended Evening Hours for Deluxe resort guests has me curious. Seems like it might be worth it to do MK on a Wednesday if you can take advantage of those hours.
Does anyone know what time MK fireworks are on Halloween party days? We’re going this summer and thinking of leaving MK and doing California Grill on a probable party day (Aug 12). Does a 7 pm dinner time seem optimal? Are there usually 2 fireworks shows on Halloween party days?
How does the day of the week impact the water park crowd? Is there a noticeable change depending on the day?
This is helpful advice. I have a question. What about three day weekends does the same apply or does it get shifted because of the extra day off ? We are going during presidents week and I know traditionally that’s a busy week.
So I want to prepare as much as possible.
Hi Tom! Do the After Hours party events that happen in Jan and Feb follow the same rules as MNSSHP and MVMCP days for MK and HS? Or would you recommend following the days of the week strategy during non-peak times of the year? The After Hours events at MK in Jan+Feb 2025 have Monday dates so I’m wondering if you think those specific dates will be good or bad. THANK YOU SO MUCH! I love your content and really appreciate how much you put into your itineraries and recommendations.
This is really confusing. You write “The best day of the week in Magic Kingdom from an objective perspective is Wednesday.” But then later refute that statement several times, “This leaves Thursday and Friday as the least busy days of the week at Magic Kingdom during normal times of the year.”
At no pojnt do you explain away this contradiction with information about holiday party nights or anything else. Can you clCear this up?
The post was very good, I appreciate how you explain it, Keep the posts coming! Very good talent.
Hey Tom..
Do you think with the “free” park hopper promotion that Disney gave for this fall/holiday season the usual strategy of going to MK for party days and hopping out will still hold up? You think enough people will have that idea with the automatic park hopper ticket that it will offset the benefits of going to MK on party days? I’m trying to plan out my park days for my early Dec trip and not sure if I’m overthinking this at all.
We’re a family of three (all adults) going Dec 21-24. Any helpful strategy of when to do MK? Will going on Sunday the 22nd be worse because it’s a weekend? Or better because it’s farther from Christmas Day? I was planning on doing HS on Sat 12/21 and hitting it early. It’s the last night of Jollywood Nights and I’m hoping that most people will want to do it later in the day and we can park hop out to somewhere else that afternoon/evening. Anyone have experience spending a few days on property during this busy time of year? Help!! Please 🙂
Your approach to DHS is sound–if you have a Park Hopper, getting in and out before DJN starts is optimal. (Although nights at DHS can be great for lower crowds than earlier in the day–so you might consider hopping back on a different day.)
Christmas crowds *typically* peak on Monday or Tuesday, so I also think MK on Sunday is the correct approach.
Just keep in mind that it’s going to be very, very busy throughout your trip. So these recommendations are relative–you’re still going to experience heavy crowds. Good luck and have fun!
My daughter and I are taking a trip to WDW in mid-November (post Veterans Day and pre-thanksgiving week). We are first time holiday travelers and going to MVMCP. Between the two party offerings, over our five night stay, there is a party every night! I am at a loss with when to schedule a HS day in our trip. I suppose we should choose HS on a Jollywood Nights day over a MK party day – but the advice in the Jollywood Nights article makes me unsure. Any insight on crowd dynamics with the updated start time for that party is appreciated!
I’m in the same situation and would love to hear any advice.
Hey there! I’m planning the same time period and find myself in the same predicament. However, based on Tom’s recommendations I think a Sunday rope drope and until close, while maybe doing something else in the late morning to mid afternoon is the best plan for HS. This should be a MK party night, however I think it’s the best bet to zig (or is this zag?) based on the teachings of The Bricker’s.
For days when there is a Jollywood Nights party in the evening, does Hollywood Studios see the same daytime lower crowds phenomenon that the Magic Kingdom sees with the Mickey Christmas Party?
Hello Tom!
Thanks for your analysis. My family and I (3 young kids) were planning to visit Monday of Labor Day – which is a MNSSHP night. Think the party might make the crowds lower during the day despite it being Labor Day? Wondering your prediction.
Thanks!
I compared 3 sites each recommending different days for each park to visit
There seems to be some consistency around Wednesday and Thursday but that’s it.
I guess it’s normal as methodology must differ
Dear Anne,
For what it’s worth I’ve found Tom’s suggestions to be the best out there. We’ve made a dozen trips in the last 4 years that last from 2 weeks to a month.
Today I began planning our days for our upcoming trip and I reviewed both Tom and Park Prodigy. They’re not all that different just minor things like one will suggest Wed then Thursday while the other has them Thursday, Wednesday.
Tom however does a deep dive explaining his reasoning and the nuances.
From my own experience he’s 99% of the time he’s spot on. Yes Tom there’s room for improvement.
Best advice, if you can swing it, is Park Hoppers. Doing MK on a party day makes a real difference. Catch fireworks another day after another Park (AK being a great choice).
Stay calm. You’ll figure it out.
Mickey 1928,
Thank you so much for taking the time to reply, that’s incredibly useful feedback.
I am always puzzled when I find discrepancy in what should be factually equivalent.
I also find the quality of the information on the blog exceptional- hence my presence here ☺️
And hopefully you’re right, I’ll figure it out.
Since you seem to have a good overview on that, what do you think of touring plans ?
Hello Tom, thank you for the article. We’ll be in Disney World from 7/28 Sunday to 8/1 Thursday this summer for the 1st time and have a four-day pass to visit one park per day. Could you recommend us what day is the best day to visit which park? And would you also recommend dining reservations and genie + or fast pass? Thank you!
Hi Tom!
Thanks for this super helpful article!
I’ve been to Disneyland a bunch of times, but I’m planning for my first Disney World trip this September. I have a 5 day pass (thinking 1 day per park, and 2 days at MK), and have to use my tickets between Sept 1 and Sept 7. I know it’s a long weekend plus MNSSHP will be on Sept 2 and 6. Could you give me recommendations on which days you would go to each park? I feel a tad lost and not sure what the best form of action would be. Thanks so much!!
I know Tom does not write about them, but hopefully someone else will know: what is the best day to visit the water parks? Should we avoid the sunniest days? Or are they just busy at the weekends because they are popular with locals?
We are coming from somewhere where sleet is more common than sun, so the children are very excited to swim outdoors without needing to break the ice first!
Water parks are popular with locals, so weekends are generally busier.
Weather is also a huge factor–the hotter and sunnier, the more likely the water parks are to be busy. If it’s colder, they’re often dead (or closed!).
Thank you very much for your reply! Anything above 20° (68°) is warm for us, so we shall be happy to go on the coldest weekday and have the pool to ourselves!